#Australia Awards a friendly way to get corporates engaging with startups

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When Patrick Crooks was trying to pitch his mobile payments startup to a big bank three years ago he was “horrified” by the barriers in place and the unwillingness of corporates to collaborate.
 
“I really, really battled,” Crooks tells StartupSmart.

“I realised there was a massive cultural problem here with how
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#Asia Three dads have found a way to bring clean air to China on the cheap

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Image via 大杨

Image via 大杨

It’s like everyone who lives in China is in an on-off relationship with the nation’s air. Sunny blue days are the honeymoon. You and air can’t get enough of each other. You go on long walks, bike rides, and adventures. But it never lasts long. Soon, you’re hiding in your apartment, afraid to go outside or even open a window. And whenever you read about air, it’s described as “Unhealthy” or “Hazardous.”

If you want to breathe healthily in China, there are a suite of items to get your hands on. Firstly, an air quality app (free). Next, a cheap basic mask that will cost you no more than a few US dollars per disposable mask. Then, a high-quality home air purifier. Expect to shell out hundreds, or even thousands of freaking dollars for this one. Can you guess which of those items is most primed for disruption?

The Shanghai-based startup Mila has its sights set on the indoor air purifier market, where it’s aiming to leverage sleek design, smart features, and a unique business model to gain an advantage over competitors.

The company also has another trick up its sleeve: a founding team of concerned dads.

Do it for the kids

“After 14 years in China, air quality started becoming a serious problem for our family around 2013,” says Mila co-founder Grant Prigge. “We had a perfect storm: my wife became asthmatic, our two-year-old was constantly sick, and I started getting respiratory infections while training for a marathon.”

Grant is not alone – for many living in Shanghai, the winter of 2013 was a turning point. It was the first time that Shanghai saw a sustained, Beijing-style “airpocalypse.”

“I remember, I couldn’t even see across the street,” says co-founder Charles Liao. “At the end of 2013, there was a huge vacuum of people – if they could leave, they left.”

“For my daughter, she’s at an age where she can look outside in the morning and she’ll know if it’s a mask day,” Charles continues. “It’s kinda sad, but it’s been ingrained.”

In that same year, co-founder David Chitayat had his first child – and also began to take air quality more seriously.

The Mila team, L-R:  Dave, Zaki (an investor), Grant, Charles, and Mila

The Mila team, L-R: Dave, Zaki (an investor), Grant, Charles, and Mila

The three dads were eager to improve the quality of air that they and their families were breathing – and they were uniquely qualified to do something about it. David had years of experience in manufacturing and sourcing in China, Charles in startups and marketing, and Grant in software development.

Making a good purifier isn’t rocket science. All you need is a HEPA filter (the high-quality filters that capture even the smallest toxic particles) and a fan to pull air through it.

But reality is more complicated. Sites like Taobao overflow with cheap air purifier devices that claim “HEPA-like” performance but skimp out on the filters themselves. On the other end of the scale lay eye-wateringly expensive devices as big as refrigerators.

“Most people buy air purifiers like French wine. They have no idea if it’s good or bad, they just buy the most expensive one they can afford and assume it must be good,” says Grant.

But buying a good, HEPA-equipped purifier is just the beginning. Air purifiers work like air conditioners: if you buy one and pop it in your living room, you can’t expect to reap the benefits in your bedroom down the hall.

Breathing deep at home can quickly become an expensive proposition: one air purifier per bedroom, another for the living room, and more until everywhere is covered. And don’t forget to buy new HEPA filters every few months! It’s no wonder why there’s a market for cheap (if ineffective) HEPA-like knockoffs online.

The Mila purifier

The Mila purifier

A new model

The folks at Mila believe they’ve found a way to crack the air purifier dilemma: a subscription model. Instead of buying several expensive purifiers at once, and then – if you remember – buying new filters every few months, the entire process is reduced to a monthly fee.

Starting at RMB 250 (US$38) per month, subscribers get two Mila units for their homes, with new HEPA filters for each unit delivered automatically every three months. The company also offers RMB 350 (US$54) and RMB 450 (US$70) plans to cover two- and three-bedroom homes, respectively. Each plan is based on a two-year commitment, with repairs/replacements covered during that time if anything goes wrong.

“Most people either put off or forget to change their filters on time, making their machines useless,” says David. Even the most expensive air purifier is just a bizarre room ornament unless it’s equipped with a clean filter.

The subscription model also makes Mila a particularly enticing option for places like fitness studios or gyms. While owners may balk at spending a few thousand dollars on a system of purifiers to cover each room, Mila’s prices make sense as a line item on a monthly spreadsheet.

The subscription model isn’t the only way that Mila is shaking up the air purifier market. Since first conceiving of the company, David, Charles, and Grant have aimed to make the device “living room worthy.”

“There are filters out there that look like transformers – it’s not something you want to put in your house, but you have to,” says Charles, who describes some purifiers as looking like bank safes or mini fridges.

The Mila purifier is much smaller and more subtle than many others. It looks a bit like the purifier put out by Xiaomi, but shorter. The Mila team is able to get away with a smaller footprint because the subscription-based model ensures that users can have enough Mila purifiers to cover their entire home – instead of buying one giant filter, putting it in the living room, and hoping for the best.

Mi Air Purifier review, photos

Xiaomi’s smart air filter

See also: Hands-on with Xiaomi’s smart air purifier

The purifier is accompanied by a Mila app for iPhone and Apple Watch, with an Android version coming soon. From the app, you can control multiple Mila purifiers, see the air quality stats for each room in your home, and check on the outdoor air quality as well. If you use an Apple Watch, you can even get an estimate of your total air intake that day based on whether you were inside or outside and how much you exerted yourself.

Starting with Shanghai, but not staying there

At its start, Mila is targeting Shanghai’s sizable expatriate community in their homes, offices, and gyms. But Charles is quick to point out, “Mila isn’t oriented only at foreigners – it’s just the first step we’re taking.”

While the Mila founders plan to work out the kinks of their marketing and business model in Shanghai, the company is currently taking pre-orders for units throughout the country. The devices are set to ship in January.

Mila is currently running on undisclosed seed funding raised from its founders’ friends and family. Grant says that the company’s target for the first year is to sell 2,000 subscriptions.

And their timing couldn’t have been better. This winter has marked Beijing’s first-ever “Red Alerts” for smog, wherein the city closed public schools, cracked down on traffic, and taken emergency measures to attempt to clean up the air. Headlines about China’s atrocious air quality may not be reassuring for the billion-plus people who live there, but they sure make for some great marketing.

Charles says the company has already made inroads with potential partners in Taipei, Hong Kong, Jakarta, Singapore, Manila, and Bangkok.

“We speak to our customers as three fathers. We know our customers are buying these units for the health of their loved ones and we take that responsibility seriously,” says Grant. “That’s why we named the company after Charles’s daughter.”

Mila may still have to wear a mask when she wanders outside on smoggy days but, thanks to her namesake company and its three devoted dads, she’ll be able to breathe easily inside.

This post Three dads have found a way to bring clean air to China on the cheap appeared first on Tech in Asia.

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#Australia Why you don’t need a patent to start a startup

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A lot of entrepreneurs we talk to believe that getting a patent is some sort of prerequisite to starting a startup.
 
But in most cases patents are something an early-stage startup should totally avoid.
 
Here’s why you don’t need a patent and what can you do to reasonably protect your intellectual property.
 
When it
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#Australia Why startups should focus on the experience not the problem

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Most startup pitches dedicate a slide to the problem they are solving.
 
They seek to explain how painful the problem is, or how big and broad a problem is. But what problem are you really solving here?
 
I’m not sure the problem perspective is the right one. When assessing startup investments I
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#Australia Google trumps Apple for Australian mobile payments, but for how long?

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After failing to come to agreement with Apple to enable mobile phone payments, six of Australia’s biggest financial institutions this week signed on (http://ift.tt/1Z9YZ6c) with Android Pay. The service will go live in Australia in the first half of 2016.
 
Both Android Pay and its competitor Apple Pay allow consumers to
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#Australia Court dismisses the Dallas Buyers Club latest copyright claim as ‘not Ben-Hur’

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The Dallas Buyers Club LLC v iiNet case appears to have come to an interesting junction yesterday when Justice Nye Perram moved (http://ift.tt/1NwKbXH) to dismiss the case “in its entirety”.
Justice Perram had already said in August (http://ift.tt/1Tz6rbq) that DBC’s contention was “surreal (http://ift.tt/1TWp83S)”. This week he added:
 

[…] it needs to
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#Asia Japan/US startup Fresvii raises US$4M from Nissay Capital

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After launching in beta late 2014, Fresvii raised US$1.8 million to launch their cloud-based social engagement tool platform AppSteroid

appsteroid

Tokyo and Silicon Valley startup Fresvii has just raised US$4 million from Japan’s Nissay Capital, with US angel Guo Wei also pitching in. Nissay is a repeat investor, having first backed Fresvii in October 2014 with US$1.8 million.

According to a release, Fresvii will be using the cash to pay off convertible debt and to add new designs to its suite of social tools. The one-year-old startup already has a stacked team of mobile game developers from Disney, Nintendo and Konami and has plans to hire more engineers with the new funds.

Screenshot of AppSteroid's in-game chat

Screenshot of AppSteroid’s in-game chat

Fresvi are the makers of AppSteroid, a social engagement platform offering tools built exclusively for mobile, such as group messaging, forums, voice-chat and so on. The mission behind AppSteroid is to help save game developers a lot of time while ramping up user engagement and retention.

“For today’s game publishers, simply relying on riveting game play or a unique story line isn’t going to get them very far. The most successful games embrace social elements into their core gameplay, creating a high level of engagement, interaction and loyalty among users,” said Hiro Nakagawa, CEO and Founder of Fresvii in a release.

Also Read: Play this mobile game and get paid with Bitcoin

The cloud-based platform, which is compatible with a number of game engines such as Unity, iOS and Android, can integrate social features (such as gameplay video recording) within hours instead of months.

“We want to help developers to create great games, and our platform will allow them to focus their attention on gameplay rather than spending time adding social features,” said Tony Gascon, General Manager at Fresvii.

To get an idea of traction, take a look at Japanese game developer Liica’s puzzle game Q Universe. AppSteroid tools added video recording functionality and in-game chat, which contributed to Q Universe’s eight million downloads in just six months. The game also scored within the ‘Top 50’ in the US Google Play store.

According to their website, Fresvii had just launched in beta back in October 2014 and now has over 2,500 registered developers globally.

The post Japan/US startup Fresvii raises US$4M from Nissay Capital appeared first on e27.

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#USA Gillette Sues Dollar Shave Club For Alleged Patent Infringement

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dollar shave club Gillette announced today that it has filed suit against Dollar Shave Club, seeking both damages and an injunction to stop the startup from selling razors that use allegedly infringing technology. According to the Wall Street Journal, the Gillette patent in question concerns a method for coating razorblades. “We have long invested heavily in innovation, and our talented scientists… Read More

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#USA Colopl Launches $50M Global Fund Dedicated To Virtual Reality

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Screen Shot 2015-12-17 at 11.10.21 AM There’s no shortage of ideas and projects in the virtual reality space. There are tons of studios popping up all over the world to create immersive content for the platform. With the Oculus, HTC and Sony offerings coming next year, now’s a better time than any to dabble in the space. If only there was money to be raised. Welp, Japan-based Colopl solved that with a newly launched… Read More

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